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Visitors and Residents: What Motivates
Engagement with the Digital Information
Environment?
Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Ph.D.Senior Research Scientist
OCLC Research
David WhiteCo-Manager Technology Assisted Lifelong Learning
University of Oxford
Donna Lanclos, Ph.D.Associate Professor for Anthropological Research
University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Visitors and Residents 2
“I think that lots of like companies and people away from my generation think that we rely and we’re obsessed with gadgets and gizmos and everybody has to buy the newest iPhone and iPad and newest everything. At the end of the day, as a student, are you really know is that is what the internet is for. How you get to it – it doesn’t matter if you don’t own a computer and you have to come to the library to use it. Um…like it’s available to you and you don’t care like how you get it.”
(WorldCat.org Focus Group Interview UKU4th year university student)
Visitors and Residents 3
“Perfect thing, I think it would be that all the useful, accurate, reliable information would like glow a different colour or something so I could tell without wasting my time going through all of them”
(Participant UKS2)
CC: konradfoerstner http://www.flickr.com/photos/konradfoerstner/4168966589/
Visitors and Residents 4
“…a lot of the times teachers say don’t use .com or don’t use Wikipedia, they like hate when we use Wikipedia. But Wikipedia is always right, so I always use that.”
(Participant USU6)
Visitors and Residents 5
“The problem with Wikipedia is it’s too easy. You can go to Wikipedia, you can get an answer, you don’t actually learn anything, you just get an answer.”
(Participant USU6 quoting a tutor)
CC Aunt Owwee http://www.flickr.com/photos/aunto/1045796179/
Visitors and Residents 6
Information Literacy
• Skills lacking• Not kept pace with digital literacy• Researchers self-taught & confident
Visitors and Residents 7
Visitors and Residents: What motivates engagement with the digital information environment?• Funded by• JISC• OCLC
• Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Ph.D.
• Oxford University• David White & Alison Le Cornu
Ph.D
• University of North Carolina, Charlotte
• Donna Lanclos, Ph.D.
Visitors and Residents 8
Why Visitors and Residents Project?
• If we build it, they will NOT come.• Shifting changes in engagement with information
environment• Effect of larger cultural changes influenced by Web?• New attitudes towards education?
• Gap in user behaviour studies – need for longitudinal studies
• Understand motivations for using and expectations of technologies and spaces in information environment
• Inform project & service design to improve engagement & uptake
http://www.oclc.org/research/activities/vandr/
Visitors and Residents 13
Objectives
• Problematize and examine assumed links between age and technological engagement
• More completely describing the social network in which digital and analog information-seeking strategies are embededded
• Inform the JISC Developing Digital Literacies strand of projects. - “Discovering Digital Literacies”
• Create a matrix of implementation options
Visitors and Residents 15
Research Questions
Do individuals develop personal engagement strategies which evolve over time and for specific needs and goals, or are the educational contexts the primary influence on their engagement strategies?
Are modes of engagement shifting over the course of time, influenced by emergent web culture and the availability of ‘new’ ways to engage, or are the underlying trends and motivations relatively static within particular educational stages?
Visitors and Residents 16
Phase 1 Pilot stage: Months 1-6
• Emerging educational stage• 30 participants
• 15 in the US• 15 in the UK
• Quantitative data: Demographics, number of occurrences of technologies, sources, and behaviors.
• Qualitative data: Themes and direct quotes.
Visitors and Residents 17
Phase I Participant Demographics
• 30 participants• 19 females, 11 males• 21 Caucasian, 3 African-American, 1 Caucasian-
Thai, 1 Hispanic, 4 unidentified• 15 secondary students• 15 university students
Visitors and Residents 19
US vs. UK Participant Ages
16 years old
17 years old
18 years old
19 years old
20-30 years old
30+ years old
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
0
5
2
7
1
0
1
6
1
4
0
3
USUK
Visitors and Residents 20
US vs. UK Participant Ethnicity
African American
Caucasian Caucasian/Thai
Hispanic Undeclared0
2
4
6
8
10
12
3
11
01
00
10
10
4
USUK
Visitors and Residents 21
US vs. UK Participant University MajorsUS (8 of 15)
• 5 Engineering
• 1 Political Science
• 1 Pre-Business
• 1 Undeclared
UK (7 of 15)
• 3 Teaching
• 1 Chemical Biology
• 1 Chemistry
• 1 History
• 1 Languages
Visitors and Residents 22
Participant Interview Questions
1. Describe the things you enjoy doing with technology and the web each week.
2. Think of the ways you have used technology and the web for your studies. Describe a typical week.
3. Think about the next stage of your education. Tell me what you think this will be like.
Visitors and Residents 23
Participant Interview Questions, cont. 4. Think of a time when you had a situation where
you needed answers or solutions and you did a quick search and made do with it. You knew there were other sources but you decided not to use them. Please include sources such as friends, family, teachers, coaches, etc.
5. Have there been times when you were told to use a library or virtual learning environment (or learning platform), and used other source(s) instead?
6. If you had a magic wand, what would your ideal way of getting information be? How would you go about using the systems and services? When? Where? How?
Visitors and Residents 24
I. Place
A. Internet
1. Search engine
a. Google
b. Yahoo
2. Social Media
a. FaceBook
b. Twitter
c. You Tube
d. Flickr/image sharing
e.. Blogging
B. Library
1. Academic
2. Public
3. School (K-12)
C. Home
D. School, classroom, computer lab
E. Other
Codebook
Visitors and Residents 25
II. Sources
A. Human
1. Mother
2. Father
3. Extended family (siblings, cousins, relatives, children, spouses)
4. Experts/Professionals
5. Friends/Colleagues (‘mates’)
6. Teachers/Professors
7. Peers (school, university colleagues but not ‘friends’)
8. Librarians
9. Other
B. Digital
1. E-books
2. Online textbooks
3. Databases
4. Websites
Codebook
Visitors and Residents 29
Diaries
•6 US and 6 UK emerging stage students•Share information-seeking situations each month•Communicate them in any format
Visitors and Residents 31
Current Project Status
•Completed 30 interviews Emerging Stage students•Collected 12 diaries for 3 months•Developed code book•Analyzed 30 interviews•Begun 30 interviews
• Establishing Stage students• Embedding Stage students• Experienced scholars
•Collecting 30 diaries for 4-6 months
Visitors and Residents 32
Future Phases
• Phase 2: Months 7-12• Establishing, Embedding, and Experienced• Add 15 to original 30 = 45 participants
• Phase 3: Months 13-24• Track 24 participants• Online survey of 400 students and scholars
• Phase 4: Months 25-36• Emerging • 6 students
Visitors and Residents 33
Selected Readings
Beetham, Helen, Lou McGill, and Allison Littlejohn. Thriving in the 21st Century:
Learning Literacies for the Digital Age (LLiDA Project). Glasgow: The Caledonian
Academy, Glasgow Caledonian University, 2009.
http://www.academy.gcal.ac.uk/llida/LLiDAReportJune2009.pdf.
Bullen, Mark, Tannis Morgan, and Adnan Qayyum. “Digital Learners in Higher Education:
Generation is Not the Issue.” Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology 37, no. 1
(Spring 2011). http://www.cjlt.ca/index.php/cjlt/article/view/550/298.
Centre for Information Behaviour and the Evaluation of Research. Information
Behaviour of the Researcher of the Future: A CIBER Briefing Paper. London: CIBER,
2008.
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/documents/programmemes/reppres/gg_final_keynote_11012008.pdf
.
Connaway, Lynn Silipigni, and Timothy J. Dickey. The Digital Information Seeker: Report
of the Findings from Selected OCLC, RIN, and JISC User Behaviour Projects. 2010.
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/documents/publications/reports/2010/digitalinformationseekerreport.pdf
.
Visitors and Residents 34
Selected Readings
Connaway, Lynn Silipigni, Timothy J. Dickey, and Marie L. Radford. “‘If it is too
inconvenient I’m not going after it:’ Convenience as a Critical Factor in
Information-seeking Behaviors.” Library & Information Science Research 33, no.
3 (2011): 179-90.
Connaway, Lynn Silipigni, and Marie L. Radford. Seeking Synchronicity:
Revelations and Recommendations for Virtual Reference. Dublin, OH: OCLC
Research, 2011. http://www.oclc.org/reports/synchronicity/full.pdf.
Institute for Museums and Library Services Research Grant. Seeking
Synchronicity: Evaluating Virtual Reference Services from User, Non-User, and
Librarian Perspectives. Lynn Silipigni Connaway and Marie L. Radford, Rutgers
University. Co-Principal Investigators. 2005-2007.
http://www.oclc.org/research/activities/synchronicity/default.htm.
Institute for Museums and Library Services Research Grant. Sense-making the
Information Confluence: The Hows and the Whys of College and University User
Satisficing of Information Needs. Brenda Dervin, Ohio State University, Principal
Investigator; Lynn Silipigni Connaway and Chandra Prabha, Co-Investigators.
2003-2005.
http://www.oclc.org/research/activities/past/orprojects/imls/default.htm.
Visitors and Residents 35
Selected Readings
Nicholas, David, Ian Rowlands, and Paul Huntington. Information Behaviour of the
Researcher of the Future: A CIBER Briefing Paper. London: CIBER, 2008.
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/documents/programmes/reppres/gg_final_keynote_11012008.pdf
.
Warwick, Claire, Isabel Galina, Melissa Terras, Paul Huntington, and Nikoleta
Pappa. “The Master Builders: LAIRAH Research on Good Practice in the
Construction of Digital Humanities Projects.” Literary and Linguistic Computing
23, no. 3 (2008): 383-96. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/13810/.
White, David, and Lynn Silipigni Connaway. Visitors and Residents: What
Motivates Engagement with the Digital Information Environment. 2011. Funded
by JISC, OCLC, and Oxford University.
http://www.oclc.org/research/activities/vandr/.
White, David S., and Alison Le Cornu. “Visitors and Residents: A New Typology for
Online Engagement.” First Monday 16, no. 9 (2011).
http://firstmonday.org/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/3171/3049
.
Visitors and Residents 36
The researchers would like to thank Dr. Alison LeCornu and Erin Hood for their assistance in keeping the team organized, scheduling and conducting interviews, analyzing the data, and disseminating the results.